I've finally got the time and gumption to sit down and write
again, so let's do some research blogging! And let's show some skin while we're
at it!
The first paper I'll talk about is not one that I'm lead
author on, but which was a really fun project to be involved in. This was the
description of a super cool specimen of a hadrosaur from the area around Grande
Prairie with some impressive skin impressions. UALVP 53722 was collected as a
large block that had fallen along the creekside. Unfortunately, the rest of the
skeleton could not be located, which might mean it's still in situ somewhere
with nothing visible, or it had already broken apart into unrecognizable
pieces. The block preserves the back of the skull with the neck arched over the
shoulders, the classic 'death pose' seen in many dinosaur skeletons. Most of
the skull is missing, but what is present shows that it is an Edmontosaurus
regalis, the slightly older species of Edmontosaurus.
And sitting on top of the
skull is a round, relatively smooth lump of soft tissue, like the comb on a
rooster's head.
Flat-headed Edmontosaurus at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.
My primary contribution to the paper was to examine the CT
scans of the specimen to confirm that there wasn't a bony structure within the
crest, so that we could be confidant that it truly was a soft tissue structure
only. The UofA put together a short video about CT scanning the fossil that is
worth a watch:
The fleshy comb in UALVP 53722 the first time we've seen
anything like this in a dinosaur, and was totally unexpected – Edmontosaurus is
one of the 'flat-headed' hadrosaurs that lacks the bony crest characteristic of
lambeosaurines like Corythosaurus or Lambeosaurus. I love this discovery
because it is such a great example of how much soft tissues contribute to the
appearance of an animal. It also goes to show how a new fossil, even for a
relatively well known dinosaur like Edmontosaurus (which is known from many
skeletons and bonebeds) can still give us new information.
I was also a big fan
of the book "All Yesterdays", and I feel like this specimen kind of
fits in with some of the more adventurous reconstructions of dinosaurs with
elaborate soft tissues that have become more fashionable of late. And like all
good discoveries, we end up with more questions that need to be answered: did
all Edmontosaurus regalis have this fleshy comb, or was it restricted to adults, or even
just adult males? If males and females both had the comb, was it larger in one
sex than the other? Was it brightly coloured? Did Edmontosaurus annectens have a fleshy
crest? We'll only be able to answer these questions with more specimens.
Anyway, go check the paper out! UALVP 53722 was on display
in Edmonton for a short time earlier this year – stay tuned for more
information on where it will be on display next! Many thanks to Phil Bell (a
former Currie Lab student and now at the University of New England
in Australia) for inviting me to help out with this paper.
Bell PR, Fanti F, Currie PJ, Arbour VM. 2014. A mummified duck-billed dinosaur with a soft-tissue cock's comb. Current Biology 24:70-75.
Horner JR. 2014. Paleontology: a cock's comb on a duck-billed dinosaur. Current Biology 24.
And for those who are extra keen, here's my Quirks & Quarks radio interview from January 2014.
And for those who are extra keen, here's my Quirks & Quarks radio interview from January 2014.